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Cash-Strapped Camps Get Creative
By G. Jeffrey MacDonald
Episcopal camps and conference centers are struggling to maintain a hospitality mission while managing costs without revenue during the pandemic.
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Church of England
Reparations Urged
By Mark Michael
The Caribbean Community, a coalition of nations in the West Indies, is calling on the Church of England to "join civil society’s conversation about reparations for development,” according to the leader of the groups Reparations Commission.
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Hunger Strike in
S. Africa Rape Case
By Mark Michael
A South African priest who says she was raped by a fellow student in 2002 has concluded a hunger strike outside the home of the Archbishop of Cape Town. The Anglican Church in Southern Africa is pursuing a disciplinary process and trying to get authorities to reopen a criminal investigation.
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Kwong Defends
New HK Security Laws
The archbishop of the Anglican Church in Hong Kong has said that restrictions imposed by the Chinese government are necessary in the wake of violent protests. The Most Rev. Paul Kwong said the change “targets only law breakers, and it does not undermine any freedom of Hong Kong, in particular the freedom of religion."
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A Ministry
of Facemasks
By Kirk Petersen
St. John's Episcopal Hospital in Queens is one of the organizations benefiting from Cut Red Tape 4 Heroes, a nonprofit created by an Episcopal laywoman to distribute personal protective equipment (PPE) in the New York City area.
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Podcast: Scriptural Guidance on Ecology
On the podcast, TLC talks with a distinguished professor of theology about what the Bible says about land, climate change, wisdom and hope.
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St. Benedict on the Virtue of Humility
By Elizabeth Elin
Christian humility is neither obsolete nor dangerous. Rather, it is, perhaps paradoxically, both universally accessible and innately personal, applicable both to Benedict’s monasteries and to the modern world.
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Hope as the
World is Ending
By Jonathan Mitchican
The suffering and loss we face right now is intense. Yet we need not face any of it without hope. God so loved us, even in our suffering, that he took on human flesh and suffered with us so that we might find our way back to him. Now more than ever, as we lose one thing after another, may we rediscover that all we have ever needed has been with us all along.
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